UNICEF Exec Calls Out People's Apathy Toward Refugee Crisis

Half of all the world’s refugees are children, according to a new UNICEF report released Wednesday.

The humanitarian organization says nearly 50 million children have been uprooted around the world because of war or poverty.

Of that, 28 million kids have been forced to flee from their homes because of “conflicts not of their making.” The number of child refugees has also doubled between 2005 and 2015.

In this image taken from video provided by the Syrian anti-government activist group Aleppo Media Center, a child sits in an ambulance after being pulled out of a building hit by an airstrike in August.

They are a few of the key findings highlighted in UNICEF’s 129-page “Uprooted” report focused on the plight of refugee and migrant children.

“The moment passes — the news cycles move on. But the danger and desperation that drive so many children and families to flee their homes are not moving on,” Anthony Lake wrote.

Hours after the report’s release, the sobering report didn’t even make the cut as a Facebook trending topic.

UNICEF Canada said it’s not discouraged that a report highlighting how half of all refugees are now children isn’t considered a hot topic of conversation.

“The fact that the report did not trend on social media is not an indication of its significance, but rather in how much harder we must work to raise awareness and encourage action for these uprooted children,” spokeswoman Stefanie Carmichael told The Huffington Post Canada on Thursday.

She praised Canadians for their “unprecedented” goodwill and generosity in response to the Syrian crisis.

“We encourage Canadians to continue supporting these vulnerable children both online and off,” she said.

Feds can do better: UNICEF Canada

Canada tops the United States when it comes to hosting migrants in relation to each country’s overall population.

UNICEF Canada wants the federal government to ban the detention of kids by the Canada Border Services Agency — especially if they’re asylum seekers or refugees.

“Children should be reunited with parents or guardians wherever possible, as quickly as possible,” the organization told HuffPost Canada. “Canada’s immigration policy can strengthen bonds to family and nation, and serve as a model of best practice to the world.”

“We are doing the very best we can humanly do.”— Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale

Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale told a Senate committee in May that his department is “working now on a number of very important revisions to issues related to detention in our immigration and border system.”

“Agencies like the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees have given Canada pretty high marks, but I want to ensure that we are doing the very best we can humanly do,” he said at the time.

Later this month, U.S. President Barack Obama will host a United Nations leaders’ summit on refugees where Canada — and five other countries — will co-host.

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Child Refugees Stage Their Stories

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In this image, 12-year-old Bassam, 11-year-old Tamer, 16-year-old Lubna and 11-year-old Farah act out different jobs at the refugee camp. Many Syrian children in Lebanon's Anjar refugee camp are forced to work to help support their families.Bassam and Tamer started selling tissues after their father was injured during a shelling blitz in Syria. The brothers often work 12 hours and earn about $3 a day, and have faced abuse while on the job.Farah weeds and clears land for sowing to support her family of 10. In this photo, she and Lubna pose as factory workers peeling oranges to make tinned fruit. These laborers often work 11-hour days for as little as $8 a day."What makes me very tired is that I have to keep bending down. When we try and stand up, they ask us to bend down," she said. "We spend the whole day like this. The money they give us is not enough."Many of these working children are also forced to miss out on educational opportunities in order to work."Education is very important. I feel it is especially important for girls. When girls get education, they are respected in society," said Lubna. "Some girls even have jobs in factories. They shouldn't be working -- they should be studying."

Hatem, 15, has been living in a refugee camp in Lebanon for four years. He saw his school get hit in an airstrike in Syria and fled, fearing his house would be targeted. Hatem says he is "sad and scared" about his destiny. He was enrolled in school for two years, but had to stop because his family couldn't afford to continue funding his education. He loved going to school -- his favorite subjects were math, English and Arabic. The teenager had planned to go to university and join the army, but those dreams are now gone. "Because I am working now and I have been off school for three years, I have missed a lot of studying and won't be able to fill the gap," Hatem said. He now sells clothes at a marketplace and practices dabke, a modern Arab folk circle dance, to keep himself busy.

Anicet, 10, fled Burundi with his grandparents almost a year ago, and currently attends a temporary learning space run by Save the Children in Tanzania's Nyarugusu refugee camp. Malaria is one of the camp's greatest killers.When Anicet grows up, he wants to be a malaria doctor. In this image, he practices his dream job while his friends act as patients and mosquitoes."I want to be a doctor so that I can help people, make a difference and save lives," said Anicet. "This would make me a very important person and it would help me get something in my life."

Many young girls and children are sent to collect firewood in the forest surrounding Nyarugusu refugee camp so their families can cook the food they receive. Women and children who venture into the woods face many dangers, including assault. Here, Esperanse, 15, shows what it is like for young girls and women to search for firewood in the forest surrounding the camp. She herself narrowly escaped an assault from three men. "There are a lot of dangers that come when we go looking for firewood. ” says Esperanse. "We can get snakebites, or even encounter men who want to abuse us. Even if we’re able to escape and run away, we have to throw down all our firewood and we lose what we came for." "My wish for the future is to have a place where I can live peacefully, a place where I can feel established, where I can feel that I'm at home, without all of these other problems," she added.

Children in Tanzania's Nyarugusu refugee camp re-enact crossing the mountains of Burundi on foot to seek refuge. Iveye, 6, is pictured on the far left carrying her 18-month-old sister, Rebecca, on her back. It took the siblings and their family five days to travel from their home to Tanzania, and the journey was far from easy."When we reached the [Burundi-Tanzania] border, the police on the Burundian side would not let me cross into Tanzania with my daughters," the girls' father, Pierre, said. "So I separated from them and snuck across the border using a secret path. When I had safely reached the other side, I came out and signaled to Iveye and her sisters." "When they saw me, they ran across the border right under the gaze of the policemen who could do nothing to stop them," he added.

Samira, 10, sitting, and Zeina, 11, standing, are best friends. Samira would like to be an actress and Zeina an artist. Both girls left Syria with their families to escape the violence. The house next to Samira's was shelled, killing the family next door. Now the girls live in Lebanon's Bekaa Valley. "In Syria, when we got snow or wind, it was OK," Samira said. "But here, when the wind blows, we get a bit scared, as we're afraid the tent will get blown away."

Walaa, 11, left Syria with her pregnant mother because bombs had blown up the hospitals, schools and supermarkets in their area. They had no access food, water or health services. When she was walking home one day, Walaa saw her school explode. This picture uses Walaa's original drawing to depict the moment her school was bombed.

Here, children in Nyarugusu refugee camp show the different ways they play and express themselves in the camp's "Child Friendly Space," known as CFS. For many kids, CFS is an oasis and cocoon of safety where they can socialize with each other.Fifteen-year-old Jacob, center, dreams of becoming a professional dancer. When he realized that he and his family had to flee Burundi, he performed dance routines in his local town market until he earned enough money to pay for his and his grandparents' transport to cross into Tanzania."I feel good about myself when I dance," said Jacob. "I feel that dancing will help me achieve my goals in life."